From 2 hours of html classes to this, you are going great! All the results looks normal there. I don't think it will run any faster, and you are right, I will add Graphical instructions too, to keep people out of the terminal. I'm very comfortable in the terminal. The actual purpose of this is to have Bible Analyzer installed very easily in Ubuntu in a proper way.

As for the output that was in the terminal. Your first error: was some of the repositories didn't update, meaning for some reason it wasn't able to connect to that server. Perhaps it doesn't exist or was down. The second error, was because you have programs installed on your computer that are no longer needed. Not a big deal either. You could remove them. The Graphical way to do this is to open go to: System -> Administration -> Synaptic when it opens on the left hand side you have AllInstalledInstalled (auto removable)Installed (local or obsolete)Installed (manual)Installed (upgradable)Not InstalledNot Installed (residual config)

You may not have all those options. The ones I highlighted you can probably safely click on those and in the right hand column select what you want to remove. Usually lib type files can be removed as well as the config files. Thanks for testing! Seems like all worked well.

There are inherent risks to adding ppa's. In this case, I'm not a programmer, so your only risk of bad coding is going to come from our Bible Analyzer Developer, and I don't think you have to worry about a Bible Programmer putting purposely bad code together to ruin your computer. So while yes, you do need to be careful about adding PPA's to the system, You shouldn't have to worry here in this case. I would say that more than likely the greater danger of PPA's is that mixing software could cause instability, more than just a vicious coder creating a PPA. None the less you always have to use discretion in installing software and choosing PPA's. That being said, here is the process I use: Our BA Developer writes the software, gives me the source code, I upload that source code to the PPA, and the PPA automatically builds the software from Source. So, pretty straight forward.

Ok, finally I have got the 4.1 going into the repo. It is not tested very extensively however it seems to be fine. If you would rather wait a little, just don't upgrade your BA. You could even temporarily disable that repo for a bit. It should be fine. 4.1 looks great and has some good improvements that were done! Thanks Bro. Tim for the hard work!

Shane

EDIT:Ok a little difficulty getting it uploaded into the repo. Give me a day or two.